Determining Whether Beam Modeling Is Appropriate
Beam theory is the one-dimensional approximation of a three-dimensional continuum. The reduction in dimensionality is a direct result of slenderness assumptions; that is, the dimensions of the cross-section are small compared to typical dimensions along the axis of the beam. The axial dimension must be interpreted as a global dimension (not the element length), such as
distance between supports,
distance between gross changes in cross-section, or
wavelength of the highest vibration mode of interest.
In Abaqus a beam element is a one-dimensional line element in three-dimensional space or in the X–Y plane that has stiffness associated with deformation of the line (the beam's “axis”). These deformations consist of axial stretch; curvature change (bending); and, in space, torsion. (Truss Elements are one-dimensional line elements that have only axial stiffness.) Beam elements offer additional flexibility associated with transverse shear deformation between the beam's axis and its cross-section directions. Some beam elements in Abaqus/Standard also include warping—nonuniform out-of-plane deformation of the beam's cross-section—as a nodal variable. The main advantage of beam elements is that they are geometrically simple and have few degrees of freedom. This simplicity is achieved by assuming that the member's deformation can be estimated entirely from variables that are functions of position along the beam axis only. Thus, a key issue in using beam elements is to judge whether such one-dimensional modeling is appropriate.
The fundamental assumption used is that the beam section (the intersection of the beam with a plane that is perpendicular to the beam axis; see the discussion in Choosing a Beam Cross-Section) cannot deform in its own plane (except for a constant change in cross-sectional area, which may be introduced in geometrically nonlinear analysis and causes a strain that is the same in all directions in the plane of the section). The implications of this assumption should be considered carefully in any use of beam elements, especially for cases involving large amounts of bending or axial tension/compression of non-solid cross-sections such as pipes, I-beams, and U-beams. Section collapse may occur and result in very weak behavior that is not predicted by beam theory. Similarly, thin-walled, curved pipes exhibit much softer bending behavior than would be predicted by beam theory because the pipe wall readily bends in its own section—another effect precluded by this basic assumption of beam theory. This effect, which must generally be considered when designing piping elbows, can be modeled by using shell elements to model the pipe as a three-dimensional shell (see About Shell Elements) or, in Abaqus/Standard, by using elbow elements (see Pipes and Pipebends with Deforming Cross-Sections: Elbow Elements).
In addition to beam elements, frame elements are provided in Abaqus/Standard. These elements provide efficient modeling for design calculations of frame-like structures composed of initially straight, slender members. They operate directly in terms of axial force, bending moments, and torque at the element's end nodes. They are implemented for small or large displacements (large rotations with small strains) and permit the formation of plastic hinges at their ends through a “lumped” plasticity model that includes kinematic hardening. See Frame Elements for details.
In addition to the various beam elements, Abaqus also provides pipe elements to model beams with pipe cross-sections that are subject to internal stress due to internal and/or external pressure loading. Abaqus provides a choice of two formulations for pipe elements:
the thin-walled formulation, where the hoop stress is assumed to be constant and the radial stress is neglected, is available in Abaqus/Explicit and Abaqus/Standard; and
the thick-walled formulation, where the hoop and radial stress vary through the cross-section, is available only in Abaqus/Standard.
The pipe elements are a specialized form of the corresponding beam elements that allow for internal and/or external pressure load specification and take the resulting hoop stress (as well as radial stress for thick-walled pipes) into account for the material constitutive calculations. Usage of the pipe elements is identical to that of the corresponding beam elements with respect to the section definition, boundary conditions at the element nodes, surface definitions, interactions such as tie constraints, etc.